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Allegory In Animal Farm, By George Orwell

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Benjamin Franklin states, “Those who would give up essential liberty to purchase a little temporary safety deserve neither.” In a similar line of thinking, George Orwell writes Animal Farm as a warning against the exchange of freedoms for security. These two famously free thinkers have more to fear from the loss of civil liberties than most, however offer these warnings in attempts to guard the individuality of the species as a whole. To keep what differentiates humans from pigs. Franklin and Orwell wish to warn against the nearly inevitable societal tendency toward class structure, the unfortunately common desire of leaders towards tyranny, and the contemptuous manner of modern nations towards replication of these actions. George Orwell writes Animal Farm to warn against political revolutions and the inevitable reversion to the mean. Animal Farm takes the form of a commentary on the political revolution then reversion of the Russian Government in the 1930-1970s. However allegory is not the only intended goal of the novel. Steven J. Greenblatt states in his essay “George Orwell,” which appears in Novels For Students Volume 3, that deeper connections to socialism spark the writing of animal farm; Greenblatt calls it “his first call for help” (Greenblatt 16). However, some critics -such as Kathleen Fitzpatrick- write that Animal Farm falls short in modern times as most do not understand the allegory. Fitzpatrick writes in a critical essay “...with the fact of my total lack
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